Posted on Mar 29, 2016
The Solution To VA Reform Isn’t The Private Sector
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The massively huge restructuring of the VA will come as a result of Congress removing it's fingers from the pie. The high amounts of corruption in the entire system is multi-generational and political. The DOD is part of the problem. The solution is to take apart each MedCen one at a time using independent persons Vet and civilian alike to audit with prosecution authority those persons found fraudulent in their duties.
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I think we need to turn our care for veterans back to our army medicine.
Currently army hospitals and army medicine itself is fighting for its life.
Currently under poor leadership, greed, and fraud our veterans are suffering daily with the VA to get care.
Solution is simple:
Pump funds into AMEDD recruitment from medics all the way up to docs. every type of specialty imaginable. Assign areas of control per Army hospital and group the hospitals to the same tricare regions we currently have. Veterans wishing to seek medical benefits from the VA must adhere to the Feres Doctrine (or something similarly specific).
That last comment may seem like a wild card here but it is for a good reason. In doing so it frees our providers from lawsuit, which then unbinds the hands of everyone below them to provide care.... for instance utilizing medics/corpsman as they should be opposed to take vitals/check allergy type work. We become a true force multiplier.
"but not everyone lives near a hospital" - This is very true which is why we establish "super clinics" in areas to extend the reach of the hospital and staff the clinic similar to the standard of our active duty clinics. One in which an Active Duty SM maintains the OIC/NCOIC slots of the clinics and a small group of medics also to make sure it runs correctly. Slaps on the wrist may happen to the tip top of a civilian CEO of the VA, but you bet that lucky dollar a clinic will be running correctly if some SFC/SSG is standing at the helm of these clinics and they know they'll be getting the hammer for any wrong doing/list cheating.
Yes. There would be much more to go into this than what I stated. Just a thought on the matter. We here at Martin Army rolled our local veterans into our care and I can honestly say it's been nothing but positive.
Besides... I cannot tell you how funny it is to watch a local gang of hoodlums that frequent the hospital. Aged the lot of them, in wheel chairs or walkers, WWII vets, yet you'd never know it the way they get into some of the ate up folks you can find in a hospital waiting area and getting to care for them is something of a honor in the day.
the problem with our VA drastic. I feel only drastic counter measure will fix the problem.
Currently army hospitals and army medicine itself is fighting for its life.
Currently under poor leadership, greed, and fraud our veterans are suffering daily with the VA to get care.
Solution is simple:
Pump funds into AMEDD recruitment from medics all the way up to docs. every type of specialty imaginable. Assign areas of control per Army hospital and group the hospitals to the same tricare regions we currently have. Veterans wishing to seek medical benefits from the VA must adhere to the Feres Doctrine (or something similarly specific).
That last comment may seem like a wild card here but it is for a good reason. In doing so it frees our providers from lawsuit, which then unbinds the hands of everyone below them to provide care.... for instance utilizing medics/corpsman as they should be opposed to take vitals/check allergy type work. We become a true force multiplier.
"but not everyone lives near a hospital" - This is very true which is why we establish "super clinics" in areas to extend the reach of the hospital and staff the clinic similar to the standard of our active duty clinics. One in which an Active Duty SM maintains the OIC/NCOIC slots of the clinics and a small group of medics also to make sure it runs correctly. Slaps on the wrist may happen to the tip top of a civilian CEO of the VA, but you bet that lucky dollar a clinic will be running correctly if some SFC/SSG is standing at the helm of these clinics and they know they'll be getting the hammer for any wrong doing/list cheating.
Yes. There would be much more to go into this than what I stated. Just a thought on the matter. We here at Martin Army rolled our local veterans into our care and I can honestly say it's been nothing but positive.
Besides... I cannot tell you how funny it is to watch a local gang of hoodlums that frequent the hospital. Aged the lot of them, in wheel chairs or walkers, WWII vets, yet you'd never know it the way they get into some of the ate up folks you can find in a hospital waiting area and getting to care for them is something of a honor in the day.
the problem with our VA drastic. I feel only drastic counter measure will fix the problem.
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